Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Iranian missiles fired at Israel in three waves of attack; no injuries

The latest barrage targeted the north, including Haifa, the Galilee and Golan Heights.

Israeli students take shelter inside a public bomb shelter at the Rupin Academic Centre, north of Tel Aviv, June 17, 2025.Photo by Gili Yaari /Flash90.
Israeli students take shelter inside a public bomb shelter at the Rupin Academic Centre, north of Tel Aviv, June 17, 2025.Photo by Gili Yaari /Flash90.

Three separate Iranian ballistic missile attacks targeted Israel’s north, south and center on Tuesday evening, the Israel Defense Forces said.

The most recent barrage, which was successfully intercepted by the IDF, targeted the Haifa, Galilee and Golan Heights regions in Israel’s north.

According to initial reports, no injuries or damages were recorded.

Earlier on Tuesday evening, air-raid sirens were activated across southern Israel, including in the desert metropolis of Beersheva.

“Sirens sounding in southern Israel as Iran launches another barrage of ballistic missiles,” the military said in an English-language statement.

According to the Ynet news outlet, one ballistic missile was shot down, while a second projectile fell short outside Israeli territory. No injuries or significant damages were reported in the attack, local media reported.

Less than two hours earlier, the Israeli military had also intercepted several Iranian missiles fired at the Jewish state’s population centers.

“In the past hour, several missiles were launched toward the State of Israel from Iran; most of them were intercepted,” the IDF said, urging civilians to continue to follow its Home Front Command guidelines.

According to Israel’s Magen David Adom medical emergency response group, no casualties were reported in the earlier Iranian aerial assault, except for four people who sustained injuries while rushing to shelter.

The attack triggered air-raid sirens in the country’s densely populated center, including Tel Aviv, as well as in the coastal plain and Samaria.

Jordan’s Al-Mamlaka public broadcaster said that sirens also sounded in the Hashemite Kingdom, with an interception claimed over Amman.

Channel 12 News reported that fewer than 10 missiles were launched as part of that attack, which was reportedly fended off with the help of a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense anti-ballistic-missile battery.

Early on June 13, more than 200 Israeli fighter jets attacked dozens of enemy targets, including military and nuclear sites, in a “preemptive, precise, combined” opening strike against Tehran’s nuclear program.

Since the start of the war on Friday, Iranian attacks on Israel’s civilian population centers have killed 24 people in the Jewish state. Three were killed on Friday, 13 overnight on Saturday, and eight early on Monday.

Channel 12 said on Tuesday that Iran launched 17 waves of attacks using more than 400 ballistic missiles, in addition to suicide drones.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said the operation would “continue for as many days as it takes to remove this threat,” vowing to end the Iranian threat to the Jewish state’s “very survival.”

See more from JNS Staff
The convoys will travel toward Prison 10 near Kfar Yona, where some yeshivah students are being held.
“I have Iran on the ‘ropes,’ ready to go down for the fall,” said the U.S. president.
Experts at JNS Summit examine claims of institutional bias against Israel at the United Nations.

The former IDF chief and defense minister told JNS that the Jewish state must remain strong against Iran and its proxies while building domestic consensus and new regional alliances.
“I didn’t serve this country to watch it get sold out by a career politician, who would rather protect his party than his constituents,” Cait Conley stated.
“I have to get even more involved because, apparently, the progressive movement is taking such a deep root in New York City, we have no choice,” Sid Winston, of Brooklyn, told JNS.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.